Addenda
A monthly e-mail newsletter from MARS HILL
AUDIO
May 15, 2004
v Number 3
"[I]t could be
argued that the world of humane good sense, clarity and peace promised by
modernity, if only we let go of God, has not been forthcoming. Natural science
has turned out to be dumb with regard to values and ends for which it supplies
the means in ever more astonishing, if troubling, abundance. The social
sciences, far from explaining everything, have no convincing rational for
themselves except as successive rhetorics of power and control and are
therefore pathways to nihilism. It should trouble us that one of the greatest
successes of the so-called collapse of totalizing meta-narratives or of any
attempts to establish truth, meaning and value is the production of the ideal
late-capitalist consumer, whose objectives stretch no further than acquiring
something, reducing it to rubbish, and going on to the next desirable
commodity."
--Janet Martin Soskice, "All That Is," a review of
David Bentley Hart's
The Beauty of the Infinite, in Times
Literary Supplement, April
9, 2004
New on our desks
ISI Books, a division of the Intercollegiate Studies
Institute, has published Creed & Culture: A Touchstone Reader,
a collection of essays first printed in Touchstone
magazine during the first ten years of its existence. Included are "Christ
& Culture: A Dilemma Reconsidered" by
James Hitchcock, "T. S. Eliot on Literary
Morals" by Russell Kirk, and "On
Recovering Poetry for Our Children"
by Steven Faulkner. In the introduction, the
collection's editor James Kushiner writes:
"Many of the essays we published in our first ten years are no longer
available but are no less valuable today than when they were first published.
In this book we offer a selection of the finest essays published during Touchstone's first decade--essays
that speak conscientiously for the gospel in a still bent time in which creed
and culture seem to be at grave risk."
In addition to many other fine essays, Creed & Culture includes writings by past MARS HILL AUDIO Journal
guests Vigen
Guroian, Leon
Podles, and Thomas
Howard. Find out more
about Creed & Culture, including
how you may order a copy for yourself or for a gift.
Atlantic Monthly Interview with Bernard
Lewis, "Islam's Interpreter"
Professor Bernard
Lewis has spent several decades studying the Middle East and Islam, and
Oxford University Press has recently published several of his essays on these
subjects in From
Lewis discussed one of his more well-known works What Went Wrong: Western Impact and Middle
Eastern Response on Volume
59 of the Journal. MARS HILL AUDIO published a full-length
version of the interview as Conversation 19, "The
Crisis of Islam and the Crisis of the West."
I Wonder What the King Is Doing Tonight
The legends surrounding the figure
of King Arthur are fascinating on many levels. The stories themselves are often
compelling and exciting. But the origins and evolution of the stories are also
intriguing. In some of the accounts, pre-Christian elements are shaded with
Christian concerns, in others the Christian element dominates with echoes of a
pre-Christian past. Themes of redemption and justice are commingled with
expressions of treachery and revenge. On Volume 27 of the MARS HILL AUDIO Journal,
Resources mentioned on Volume 67
Several of you have called or sent e-mail requesting links to the on-line
resources mentioned on Volume 67 (March/April 2004) of the MARS
HILL AUDIO Journal. Here are some of the items mentioned
in this issue: "Postmodern
Irony and Petronian Humanism" (from R.R. Reno's In the Ruins of the Church); "The
Organization Kid" by David Brooks (from The Atlantic
Monthly); and Mark Edmundson's "On the Uses of a Liberal
Education." To review this list, and for future reference, see our online Listener's Guides
(please note this: this link will not be active until May 20).
Guest Profile: Quentin Schultze
"The beginning of all good human communication is listening. If we gab all the time, whether in person or on-line, we live noisily--and foolishly. Such egocentric racket is a major human problem; it leads to greater isolation and incoherence, not to better communication. The more we try to communicate without first listening, the more confused, frustrated and manipulative we become. This is partly why so many people's lives today are technologically rich and relationally poor. Listening is an under-appreciated art in the information age. Monks during the Middle Ages often lived by a wonderful rule: 'Speak only if you can improve upon the silence. '"--Quentin Schultze
Understanding the art of human communication, and sharing the results of his
labor, is the vocation of
On Vol. 59 Schultze discussed Habits of the High-Tech Heart: Living Virtuously in the Information Age, arguing that people ought to be very deliberate in how they use new communication and information technologies, striving for moderation, wisdom, and humility. Without such virtues we may find "that informational abundance further confuses us about the nature and purpose of living." Schultze would have us avoid the technological infatuation and digital utopianism that are all too common in our media, educational institutions, and even churches. Instead, he offers wise guidance on how to be responsible stewards of technological developments, so that we might spend our limited time and energy on the cultivation of character and authentic, intimate human communication.
Schultze was a guest on the very first issue of the MARS HILL AUDIO Journal
(then the MARS HILL Tapes) back in 1993, discussing Pat
Robertson's plans at the time for a cable channel devoted to Christian game
shows--24 hours a day. On the upcoming issue, Vol. 68 (May/June 2004) Schultze
will discuss his new book, Christianity and
the Mass Media in America: Toward a
Democratic Accommodation. Stay tuned.
Emerging
Scholars Network
The Emerging Scholars Network (ESN) is a new endeavor by InterVarsity Christian Fellowship that seeks to identify, encourage, and support the next generation of Christian scholars so that they might be a leavening influence among the people, ideas, and structures of the academy. Membership in the ESN is free and is open to undergraduate and graduate students, professors, researchers, campus ministers, and others in academic or related vocations.
ESN members may receive discounts on books from InterVarsity Press and Eerdmans, and members have access to on-line discussion groups on topics of interest to Christians in academia. But the most valuable benefit of membership, it is hoped, will be the network itself as a means of fostering mentoring relationships between students and teachers, and collegial relationships among scholars in the same fields or in geographic proximity.
For more information, including the ESN Mission Statement, endorsements from various people in academia, a summary of the benefits of membership, and the on-line membership form, see www.emergingscholars.org.
"Conjugal Happiness" and the
"There
is certainly no country in the world where the tie of marriage is more
respected than in
Tomorrow morning, frequent MARS HILL AUDIO Journal
guest Allan
Carlson will give a lecture entitled "'Conjugal
Happiness' and the American Way: On the Special Relationship between Marriage
and the American Experience" at the Family Research Council
(Washington, D.C.) in which he explores the unique role played by traditional
marriage in the shaping of American life and national identity. Among other themes,
Dr. Carlson will explore the assumptions about marriage that informed the
framers of the U.S. Constitution, how marriage has unified the nation and
shaped critical institutions, and how
This lecture will be given on Wednesday, May 19 at 11:00am at FRC. For those of us not able to attend this lecture, it will be broadcast live online. For more information, call FRC at 202-637-4614 or send e-mail to FRCLectures@frc.org.
Audio
Files, Printable Files, and Past Issues of Addenda
Subscribers to the CD version of the MARS HILL AUDIO Journal receive an additional conversation at the end of disc 2 of each issue. A few months ago we made these "bonus tracks" accessible to our cassette subscribers in the form MP3 audio files. Several listeners noted that the manner in which we had posted these tracks on-line was awkward and difficult to navigate. We have rearranged these files on our CD Bonus page; they are now much more accessible and we encourage you to take a listen.
Another area of on-line navigational difficulty has been the arrangement (or lack thereof) of the various printable documents (essays, fundraising letters, etc.) that we have posted over the past year. Therefore, we have created a new PDF webpage in which we have collected and arranged these items. Among other things you will find recently posted essays by Gilbert Meilaender, Tom Howard, and R. R. Reno.
Past issues of Addenda are also available on-line.
Spring Fundraising Letter
As a non-profit organization, MARS
HILL AUDIO relies on the generosity of donors for around 20% of its
operating budget. Our main vehicles for raising these necessary funds are two
fundraising letters sent out each year, one in the spring and one in the fall.
More than mere pleas for money, these letters have an educational purpose,
focusing on some aspect of the work of MARS
HILL AUDIO or on a topic that is of special interest to
Another way in which our subscribers have been extremely helpful to us is by referring others to the MARS HILL AUDIO Journal. The reply form that comes with the fundraising letter includes a section for writing in the names of friends, family, colleagues, or acquaintances you think would be interested in and benefit from the Journal. We encourage you to return this form to us even if you decide not to enclose a contribution. You may also refer people using our on-line form or e-mail. Each referral will receive a no-obligation demonstration copy of the Journal.
Listener Mail
There are two new letters posted to our new Listener Mail page, and we encourage you to send your submission to letters@marshillaudio.org. We will acknowledge receipt of your e-mail, but, depending on the volume, we may not respond to it beyond that. If you would prefer to send a letter, please see our mailing address at the end of this newsletter. If we decide to print your letter we will include your name unless you request to remain anonymous.
Various Details, Disclaimers, Etc.
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Copyright 2004 MARS HILL AUDIO, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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HILL AUDIO